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Laser Interstitial Thermal Therapy (LITT) is a minimally invasive surgical technique that allows for biopsy and thermal ablation of brain tumors. Pediatric patients with brain tumors who are eligible and enroll in the trial will undergo LITT at the time of diagnosis or at the time of recurrence/progression rather than undergo an open craniotomy and tumor resection/biopsy. LITT will include a stereotactic biopsy followed by thermal ablation of the tumor. This study will monitor the safety and efficacy of LITT for the treatment of pediatric brain tumors.
Full description
Pediatric brain tumors have a variety of surgical options depending on the location and type of tumor. Complete or near complete surgical removal of pediatric brain tumors usually results in the best chance of survival or long-term control of the tumor. Surgical resection through an open craniotomy is the most common surgical treatment for accessible brain tumors. For tumors that are not surgically accessible or that are resistant to surgical intervention, treatment is limited to radiation and or chemotherapy, which can have significant long term toxicity in children.
Laser interstitial thermal therapy (LITT) offers a minimally invasive surgical option to treat central nervous system (CNS) tumors. LITT uses laser energy delivered to a target (i.e. CNS tumor) through a fiberoptic catheter, which results in damage to intracellular proteins and DNA, and subsequent cell death. LITT provides a sharp demarcation between ablated and unharmed tissue, which, when combined with the ability to monitor and control the ablation via MR thermal imaging, results in a high level of precision and control. LITT may offer a treatment option for patients with deep brain lesions that are surgically inaccessible, such as tumors located in the thalamus, hypothalamus, basal ganglia and brainstem. LITT may also be a potential treatment for brain tumors which have recurred or persist despite conventional therapies including craniotomy. The MRI-guided laser probe used in LITT utilizes a much smaller surgical corridor through the brain to reach a deep lesion, potentially reducing the risk of complications.
This study will offer LITT, rather than open craniotomy, for the diagnosis and treatment of newly diagnosed pediatric brain tumors located in difficult to surgically access regions of the brain and for the treatment of recurrent/resistant pediatric brain tumors located anywhere within the brain. The primary aim of this study is to determine if LITT is effective in reducing (or at least maintaining current rates of) tumor re-growth while lowering rates of post-surgical complications and improving quality of the procedure (i.e. shorter hospitalization and less use of pain medication compared to standard surgery for tumor removal/biopsy).
This study has the following goals:
Patients enrolled on this study will require routine post-LITT follow-up, including intermittent physical exams to assess for side effects and MRIs to monitor the status of the tumor. The follow-up is similar to that performed following an open craniotomy and does not involve any extra studies. The side effects and rate of tumor control for each brain tumor patient enrolled on the trial will be compared to disease matched historical controls to learn more about the morbidity and efficacy of LITT in this population of patients compared to patients who underwent open craniotomy for resection/biopsy.
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Inclusion and exclusion criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
A) Newly diagnosed low-grade CNS tumor located in a site that is difficult to access surgically or recurrent/persistent low-grade CNS tumor (any site) despite treatment with conventional therapy. Tumor types include:
B) Newly diagnosed high-grade CNS tumor located in a site that is difficult to access surgically or recurrent/persistent high-grade CNS tumors (any site) despite treatment with conventional therapy. Tumor types include:
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10 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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